on Fiction University:
How to write tight, third-person internalization that feels natural to the character.
Getting inside a character’s head is a key element to getting the reader to care about that character—love them, hate them, fear them, whatever the emotion you want to evoke..
In first person this is easy, because you’re already so close to their perspective the thoughts roll naturally into the story. With third person it can be more challenging, because there’s an extra layer between the character and the reader.
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